The original
Peter Piper's Alphabet first appeared as Peter Piper's Practical Principles
of Plain and Perfect Pronunciation, published in London in 1819. It
was widely re-published, and appeared as a nursery rhyme in Mother Gooses's
Quarto in Boston in 1845.

The versions
still existing today have a few differences in the people who are in the
tongue-twister alphabet, but Peter Piper appears in almost the same way.
Most general readers are unaware that Peter Piper had a whole alphabet
of tongue-twisters, knowing only Peter's own tangler, usually as lines
1, 3, 4. To add to the fun, some even add to the end of each Peter line,
"off a pewter plate."The following
is one A-to-Z version.

Peter Piper's Alphabet

Andrew Airpump asked his aunt her ailment.
Did Andrew Airpump ask his aunt her ailment?
If Andrew Airpump asked his aunt her ailment,
Where's the ailment of Andrew Airpump's aunt?